Tag: film analysis site

On a rock, there sits a man lost in thought. Or perhaps he is not thinking at all and is instead letting the landscape around him fill his thoughts unconsciously. Werner Herzog's 1976 film, Heart of Glass (Herz aus Glas), has one of the director's strongest opening set of images as the main character of … Continue reading Heart Of Glass (1976) – Optimism in Destruction

On watching all of Patrick Keiller's "Robinson" trilogy of films recently, it struck home how effectively stillness within a visual frame can traverse the geographical plain and recreate a journey that is both political and sociological. This, of course, goes to the heart filmmaking itself, the relationships with cuts especially and its portrayal of time, … Continue reading Stasis In London (1994) – Patrick Keiller.

British cinema is obsessed with the effect of location upon the individual. In fact, it wouldn't be so sweeping to suggest that large swaths of culture born on these isles stems from the idea that the individual can be deeply molded by their surroundings and any fictional drama from Albion will be bare the aesthetics … Continue reading Fear And Loathing In The Countryside – Withnail And I (1987).

British cinema in the early 1950s appears to have been fond of experimenting with other art forms. Powell and Pressburger were transplanting opera and dance into the form in their colour zoetrope Offenbach amalgamation, The Tales Of Hoffmann (1951) (and slightly earlier in The Red Shoes (1948)) whilst Laurence Olivier was continuing his melding of … Continue reading Murder In The Cathedral (1952) – George Hoellering (BFI).